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PERSPECTIVES FROM THE FIELD

A love letter to Black birthing people from Black birth workers, midwives, and physicians

OBG Management. 2023 March;35(3):30-34 | doi: 10.12788/obgm.0270
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In reflecting on a past patient encounter, this author began a collective movement of Black Birth workers to share an important message with Black pregnancy-capable people. This is their story…

Pearls for reassurance

While the inequities and their solutions are grounded in the need for systemic change,22 we realize that these population-level solutions feel abstract when our sisters and siblings ask us, “So what can I do to advocate for myself and my baby, right now in this pregnancy?” To be clear, no amount of personal hypervigilance on our part as Black pregnancy-capable people is going to fix these problems, which are systemic; however, we want to provide a few pearls that may be helpful for patient self-advocacy and reassurance:

  1. Seek culturally and ethnically congruent care. We intuitively want to find a clinician who looks like us, but sadly, in the United States only 5% of physicians and 2% of midwives are Black. Demand exceeds supply for Black patients who are seeking racially congruent care. Nonetheless, it is critical that you find a physician or midwife who centers you and  provides support and care that affirms the strengths and assets of you, your family, and your community when cultural and ethnic congruency are not possible for you and your pregnancy. 
  2. Ask how your clinicians are actively working to ensure optimal and equitable experiences for Black birthing individuals. We recommend asking your clinician and/or hospital what, if anything, they are doing to address health care inequities, obstetric racism, or implicit bias in their pregnancy and postpartum care. Many groups (including some authors of this letter) are working on measures to address obstetric racism. An acknowledgement of initiatives to mitigate inequities is a meaningful first step. You can suggest that they look into it while you explore your options, as this work is rapidly emerging in many areas of the country. 
  3. Plan for well-person care. The best time to optimize pregnancy and birth outcomes is before you get pregnant. Set up an appointment with a midwife, ObGyn, or your primary care physician before you get pregnant. Discuss your concerns about pregnancy and use this time to optimize your health. This also provides an opportunity to build a relationship with your physician/ midwife and their group to evaluate whether they curate an environment where you feel seen, heard, and valued when you go for annual exams or problem visits. If you do not get that sense after a couple of visits, find a place where you do. 
  4. Advocate for a second opinion. If something does not sound right to you or you have questions that were not adequately answered, it is your prerogative to seek a second opinion; a clinician should never be offended by this. 
  5. Consider these factors, for those who deliver in a hospital (by choice or necessity): 

    a. 24/7 access to obstetricians and dedicated anesthesiologists in the hospital

    b. trauma-informed medical/mental health/social services

c. lactation consultation

d. supportive trial of labor after cesarean delivery policy

e. massive blood transfusion  protocol. 

  • Seek doula support! It always helps to have another set of eyes and ears to help advocate for you, especially when you are in pain during pregnancy, childbirth, or in the postpartum period, or are having difficulty advocating for yourself. There is also evidence that women supported by doulas have better pregnancy-related outcomes and experiences.23 Many major cities in the United States have started to provide race-concordant doula care for Black birthing people  for free.24
  •  Don’t forget about your mental health. As stated, chronic stress from racism impacts birth outcomes. Having a mental health clinician is a great way to mitigate adverse effects of prolonged tension.25–27
  • Ask your clinician, hospital, or insurance company about participating in group prenatal care and/or nurse home visiting models28 because both are associated with improved birth outcomes.29 Many institutions are implementing group care that provides race-concordant care.30,31 
  • Ask your clinician, hospital, or local health department for recommendations to a lactation consultant or educator who can support your efforts in breast/ chest/body-feeding. 
  • We invite you to consider this truth

    You, alone, do not carry the entire population-level risk of Black birthing people on your shoulders. We all carry a piece of it. We, along with many allies, advocates, and activists, are outraged and angered by generations of racism and mistreatment of Black birthing people in our health systems and hospitals. We are channeling our frustration and disgust to demand substantive and sustainable change.

    Our purpose here is to provide love and reassurance to our sisters and siblings who are going through their pregnancies with thoughts about our nation’s past and present failures to promote health equity for us and our babies. Our purpose is neither to minimize the public health crisis of Black infant and maternal morbidity and mortality nor is it to absolve clinicians, health systems, or governments from taking responsibility for these shameful outcomes or making meaningful changes to address them. In fact, we love taking care of our community by providing the best clinical care we can to our patients. We call upon all of our clinical colleagues to educate themselves to be ethically and equitably equipped to provide health care for Black pregnant patients. Finally, to birthing Black families, please remember this: If you choose to have a baby, the outcome and experience must align with what is right for you and your baby to survive and thrive. So much of the joys of pregnancy have been stolen, but we will recapture the celebration that should be ours in pregnancy and the journey to parenthood.

    Sincerely,

    Ebony B. Carter, MD, MPH
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    Washington University School of Medicine
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Karen A. Scott, MD, MPH
    Birthing Cultural Rigor, LLC
    Nashville, Tennessee

    Andrea Jackson, MD, MAS
    ObGyn
    University of California,
    San Francisco

    Sara Whetstone, MD, MHS
    ObGyn
    University of California, 
    San Francisco

    Traci Johnson, MD
    ObGyn
    University of Missouri 
    School of Medicine
    Kansas City, Missouri

    Sarahn Wheeler, MD
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    Duke University School of Medicine
    Durham, North Carolina

    Asmara Gebre, CNM
    Midwife
    Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
    San Francisco, California

    Joia Crear-Perry, MD
    ObGyn
    National Birth Equity Collaborative
    New Orleans, Louisiana

    Dineo Khabele, MD
    Gynecologic Oncology
    Washington University School of Medicine
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Judette Louis, MD, MPH
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    University of South Florida College of Medicine
    Tampa, Florida

    Yvonne Smith, MSN, RN
    Director
    Barnes-Jewish Hospital
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Laura Riley, MD
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    New York, New York

    Antoinette Liddell, MSN, RN
    Care Coordinator
    Barnes-Jewish Hospital
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Cynthia Gyamfi-Bannerman, MD
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    Columbia University Irving Medical Center
    New York, New York

    Rasheda Pippens, MSN, RN
    Nurse Educator
    Barnes-Jewish Hospital
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Ayaba Worjoloh-Clemens, MD
    ObGyn
    Atlanta, Georgia

    Allison Bryant, MD, MPH
    Maternal Fetal Medicine
    Massachusetts General Hospital
    Boston, Massachusetts

    Sheri L. Foote, CNM
    Midwife
    Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
    San Francisco, California

    J. Lindsay Sillas, MD
    ObGyn
    Bella OB/GYN
    Houston, Texas

    Cynthia Rogers, MD
    Psychiatrist
    Washington University School of Medicine
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Audra R. Meadows, MD, MPH
    ObGyn
    University of California, San Diego

    AeuMuro G. Lake, MD
    Urogynecologist
    Urogynecology and Healing Arts
    Seattle, Washington

    Nancy Moore, MSN, RN, WHNP-BC
    Nurse Practitioner
    Barnes-Jewish Hospital
    St. Louis, Missouri

    Zoë Julian, MD, MPH
    ObGyn
    University of Alabama at Birmingham

    Janice M. Tinsley, MN, RNC-OB
    Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
    San Francisco, California

    Jamila B. Perritt, MD, MPH
    ObGyn
    Washington, DC

    Joy A. Cooper, MD, MSc
    ObGyn
    Culture Care
    Oakland, California

    Arthurine K. Zakama, MD
    ObGyn
    University of California,San Francisco

    Alissa Erogbogbo, MD
    OB Hospitalist
    Los Altos, California

    Sanithia L. Williams, MD
    ObGyn
    Huntsville, Alabama

    Audra Williams, MD, MPH
    ObGyn
    University of Alabama, Birmingham

    Hedwige “Didi” Saint Louis, MD, MPH
    OB Hospitalist
    Morehouse School of Medicine
    Atlanta, Georgia

    Cherise Cokley, MD
    OB Hospitalist
    Community Hospital
    Munster, Indiana

    J’Leise Sosa, MD, MPH
    ObGyn
    Buffalo, New York